There is currently a proposal for a national park reserve in a place called Nááts'ihch'oh, which is just north of the Nahanni National Park, which was expanded last year. It's urgent because in fact it's on the verge of determining its boundaries.
Currently there are three sets of boundaries that are being proposed, and each of those particular sets of boundaries, even the one that has the greatest conservation of the watershed, excludes a rather significant section of caribou habitat. So that's why I say it's an urgent and rather immediate thing that is right before us, and it highlights the importance of collaboration, because while we have the species at risk legislation and we have the parks creation approach, we haven't put the filter of species protection on that particular parks proposal in the same way that we could have.
So one of the things that we've certainly been actively campaigning about and educating the public about is the whole concept of being able to protect the whole watershed of the Nahanni, not only for the protection of the park below it, which is the Nahanni itself, or for the protection of the caribou habitat that in fact we can do in that particular case. So you're right that caribou habitat requires areas that might normally surpass the borders of a national park, but in this particular case, we have the opportunity to do that and we're not. So there's a real urgent opportunity from that perspective, to protect, in this case, an entire herd.